Kat D, Samuel A G
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 1984 Aug;10(4):512-25. doi: 10.1037//0096-1523.10.4.512.
Three experiments tested Samuel and Newport's (1979) hypothesis that the perceptual system sorts its input on the basis of its spectral quality (periodic vs. aperiodic). In Experiment 1, repeated presentation of a shaped white-noise segment (aperiodic) produced a labeling shift on a /ja-za/ continuum (primarily aperiodic); two periodic adaptors produced no effect, supporting Samuel and Newport's hypothesis. The second experiment replicated these results and showed that the nonspeech adaptor produced almost as much adaptation as the test series' endpoint /za). In addition, using several mixtures of periodic and aperiodic adaptors indicated that the aperiodic component dominates adaptation effects for /ja-za/. A final experiment, using a similarity rating task, confirmed that subjects group /za/ with unvoiced fricatives rather than with other voiced consonants. The results thus indicate that the perceptual system is sensitive to whether the input is primarily periodic or aperiodic, regardless of whether it is speech or nonspeech.
三项实验对塞缪尔和纽波特(1979)提出的假设进行了检验,该假设认为,感知系统会根据输入信息的频谱特性(周期性与非周期性)对其进行分类。在实验1中,重复呈现一个成形的白噪声片段(非周期性),会在/ja-za/连续统(主要是非周期性的)上产生标签偏移;两个周期性适应刺激则没有效果,这支持了塞缪尔和纽波特的假设。第二个实验重复了这些结果,并表明非语音适应刺激产生的适应性几乎与测试系列的终点/za/一样多。此外,使用周期性和非周期性适应刺激的几种混合表明,非周期性成分主导了/ja-za/的适应效果。最后一个实验,采用相似性评级任务,证实了受试者将/za/与清擦音归为一组,而不是与其他浊辅音归为一组。因此,结果表明,感知系统对输入信息主要是周期性还是非周期性敏感,无论其是语音还是非语音。